Copy 1
Principles of general and comparative physiology : intended as an introduction to the study of human physiology : and as a guide to the philosophical pursuit of natural history / by William B. Carpenter, M.D.
- William Benjamin Carpenter
- Date:
- 1841
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Principles of general and comparative physiology : intended as an introduction to the study of human physiology : and as a guide to the philosophical pursuit of natural history / by William B. Carpenter, M.D. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Fe ee ee CONOCOrRWwWNrowanN > Ore CO DD EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. N.B. When no paragraph is referred to, the one last named is understood. PLATE I. Vegetable Tissues. of spiral fibre. 20 2] 22 . 28 Animal Structures. Trachez of Insects, § 31, 462. Spiral cartilage from trachea of Dugong, § 32. Dilated Air-saes of Bombus terrestris, Humble-Bee, § 33, 463. Appearance of the membrane lining Air-sacs, § 33. Bronchial tubes of human lung, § 34. Arrangement of fibres in tendon, with muscular fibre, § 60. Arrangement of fibres in elastic tissue of igamentum nuche. Single muscular fibre from voluntary muscle, § 64. Muscular structure of organic life, not united into fibres, § 65. Varicose nerve tubes of the brain, § 68. Cylindrical tubuli of nervous fibres. 4 Vegetable Structures. Horizontal and vertical sections of an Lvogenous stem of 3: years growth; a, pith; b, 6, spiral vessels constituting medullary sheath ; c, c, dotted ducts; d,d, woody fibre; e,e, bark, § 77. Horizontal and vertical sections of an Endogenous stem; a, a, cellular tissue ; 6, 6, spiral vessels; c, c, ducts; d, d, woody fibre, § 78. PLATE II.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29299925_0001_0027.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)